Trevor Mein
Meteorological conditions have directed much of Trevor Mein’s life. Weather and the effects of climate were daily challenges on the family property in central Victoria and so it comes as no surprise to discover that his attention is often directed skywards.
A fascination with the shifting cloudscape has developed over time and Mein has assembled an extensive archive of images over the past two decades. These images present a contrast to his commercial work, a photographic lexicon of contemporary design and architecture. However in both fields Mein is determined to engage with the visual poetics of shape, form, light and atmosphere.
These elements are also evident in his collaborative equine series. The horse is abstracted into parts, highlighting the sense of movement through space and the physical geometry of equus.
[view Trevor Mein's CV]
[view Trevor Mein's website]
A fascination with the shifting cloudscape has developed over time and Mein has assembled an extensive archive of images over the past two decades. These images present a contrast to his commercial work, a photographic lexicon of contemporary design and architecture. However in both fields Mein is determined to engage with the visual poetics of shape, form, light and atmosphere.
These elements are also evident in his collaborative equine series. The horse is abstracted into parts, highlighting the sense of movement through space and the physical geometry of equus.
[view Trevor Mein's CV]
[view Trevor Mein's website]
thursdayfourtwentytwo 2008
pigment print on cotton rag paper
111 x 164 cm Ed. of 10
pigment print on cotton rag paper
111 x 164 cm Ed. of 10